North Korea drops $10m on museum near Cambodia's Angkor Wat

North Korea drops $10m on museum near Cambodia's Angkor Wat

Tourists visit the world heritage Angkor Wat temple during sunrise in Siem Reap province, some 300 kilometers northwest of Phnom Penh on July 14, 2012. Built by King Suryavarman II in the 12th century, Angkor Wat is considered the largest Khmer temple complex in the world.

North Korea has built a $10 million museum near Cambodia's ancient Angkor Wat temple, which is scheduled to begin operations in April 2013.

The museum is being built by the North Korean artists' group Mansudae Art Studio, with investments from the regime, Yonhap News Agency reported. It is intended as a "gesture of friendship" to Cambodia, with which Kim Il Sung had established close relations, Yonhap said.

NKNews.org reported that the museum boasts a painting of Buddha by North Korean artists, a 3D show about the stone cutting history of the Khmer, geographical depictions of Angkor Park and Siem Reap, and — the piece de resistance — a "giant North Korean-painted mosaic of the 12th century Angkor war, religion, and daily life."